There are other trades that use knives of course, but surely a butcher, slaughterman or hunter, someone used to a layout of a mammalian body, would be quite expert in removing organs, especially if they'd worked in those areas for many years? The very fact that doctors at the time were in two minds about whether the killer had anatomical skills says something about it, doesn't it?
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Did he have anatomical knowledge?
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Originally posted by Rosella View PostThere are other trades that use knives of course, but surely a butcher, slaughterman or hunter, someone used to a layout of a mammalian body, would be quite expert in removing organs, especially if they'd worked in those areas for many years? The very fact that doctors at the time were in two minds about whether the killer had anatomical skills says something about it, doesn't it?
This is the page:
Forum for discussion about how Jack could have done it, why Jack might have done it and the psychological factors that are involved in serial killers. Also the forum for profiling discussions.
You might also be interested to read this:
Regards, Jon S.
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Thanks Wickerman. Interesting! I just wonder though whether, if Jack was a butcher whether he could have picked up such knowledge from buying second hand medical books explaining these procedures. If he wasn't a surgeon or medical student he could be someone using a knife in his daily life and able to kill horses or pigs quickly. A self employed butcher for instance might experiment on them in that way before proceeding to humans.
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Well, Dr Brown in his inquest deposition for Kate Eddowes did state '..It required a great deal of knowledge to have removed the kidney and to know where it was placed.' He went on to say, though, that 'Such a knowledge might be possessed by someone in the habit of cutting up animals'. Such as a slaughterman or butcher.
Drs Sequeira and Saunders attributed elementary anatomical skill to the killer and Dr Phillips thought that the mutilation in the case of Eddowes...'gave no evidence of anatomical knowledge in the sense that it evidenced the hand of a qualified surgeon' according to Swanson's report.
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Originally posted by Rosella View PostWell, Dr Brown in his inquest deposition for Kate Eddowes did state '..It required a great deal of knowledge to have removed the kidney and to know where it was placed.' He went on to say, though, that 'Such a knowledge might be possessed by someone in the habit of cutting up animals'. Such as a slaughterman or butcher.
Drs Sequeira and Saunders attributed elementary anatomical skill to the killer and Dr Phillips thought that the mutilation in the case of Eddowes...'gave no evidence of anatomical knowledge in the sense that it evidenced the hand of a qualified surgeon' according to Swanson's report.
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Innards
Thanks Sam and GUT. I did know the question came up at the inquest, but was unsure whether there were big differences between how to extract kidneys, etc etc. Now I know :-). Yes, Lynn, pigs as well - maybe the young master was fascinated when it was time to say goodbye to their porcine friends! Adding credence to my Posh Jack theory - one of three I am attached to. Theories, I mean, not pigs - disliked them since one bit me on the behind when I was a child at my step-grandfather's farm!
Best wishes
C4
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Originally posted by curious4 View PostThanks Sam and GUT. I did know the question came up at the inquest, but was unsure whether there were big differences between how to extract kidneys, etc etc. Now I know :-). Yes, Lynn, pigs as well - maybe the young master was fascinated when it was time to say goodbye to their porcine friends! Adding credence to my Posh Jack theory - one of three I am attached to. Theories, I mean, not pigs - disliked them since one bit me on the behind when I was a child at my step-grandfather's farm!
Best wishes
C4
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Pork butcher
Hello Trevor,
Well there was one at least :-). But I agree, any pig who decided to take a stroll through the starving slum dwellers would have had only the squeal left when it got to the other side.
Best wishes
C4
P.S. I did get it - harhar!
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It seems that ripperologists who themselves are in the medical profession suggest not just medical knowledge but indeed surgical skill in the cases of Chapman and Eddowes...
Cant see any reasonable reason to disagree with them... Unless of course you're trying to push a theory about someone without the skills...
Seems we have this from prosector now and from nick warren. I remember nick giving an excellent demonstration at a conference regarding the degree of difficult in locating the kidney...
Given the darkness of mitre square, quite astonishing reallyYou can lead a horse to water.....
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Originally posted by packers stem View PostIt seems that ripperologists who themselves are in the medical profession suggest not just medical knowledge but indeed surgical skill in the cases of Chapman and Eddowes...
Cant see any reasonable reason to disagree with them... Unless of course you're trying to push a theory about someone without the skills...
Seems we have this from prosector now and from nick warren. I remember nick giving an excellent demonstration at a conference regarding the degree of difficult in locating the kidney...
Given the darkness of mitre square, quite astonishing really
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View PostDoes it make sense to suggest that a surgeon or someone within the medical profession would kill and remove organs when the same organs were readily available on a daily basis from mortuaries?
www.trevormarriott.co.uk
Quite the message.
MikeThe Ripper's Haunts/JtR Suspect Dr. Francis Tumblety (Sunbury Press)
http://www.michaelLhawley.com
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostIf someone pushed me into a dark alleyway with a corpse, threw me a knife and told me I had five minutes to extract a major organ or they'd kill my family, squeamishness aside I'd probably make a right dog's dinner out of it. I can't see why some of the medical men thought the killer was a layman... unless there was an ulterior motive."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by packers stem View PostIt seems that ripperologists who themselves are in the medical profession suggest not just medical knowledge but indeed surgical skill in the cases of Chapman and Eddowes...
Cant see any reasonable reason to disagree with them... Unless of course you're trying to push a theory about someone without the skills...
Seems we have this from prosector now and from nick warren. I remember nick giving an excellent demonstration at a conference regarding the degree of difficult in locating the kidney...
Given the darkness of mitre square, quite astonishing really"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Trevor Marriott View PostDoes it make sense to suggest that a surgeon or someone within the medical profession would kill and remove organs when the same organs were readily available on a daily basis from mortuaries?
www.trevormarriott.co.uk"Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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